The eruption continued after the initial event, prompting the agency to issue an ashfall forecast for parts of Kagoshima, Kumamoto and Miyazaki prefectures. No injuries or damage to buildings have been reported, according to Japan’s News Agency (Kyodo).
In the latest series of eruptions, large volcanic rocks flew as far as the fifth station, but no pyroclastic flows were detected. The alert level remains at three on a scale of five, which restricts access to the mountain.
Sakurajima, one of Japan’s most active volcanoes, is linked to the Osumi Peninsula on Kyushu, the country’s southwestern main island. It was once an island, but a a major lava flow in 1914 created a land bridge to the peninsula.
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